I am a body
of ghost—
haint-kin cloaked
in earthen flesh
learning to see
my Self
in the unyielding
barrenness of my mother’s
front yard.
The salted fault lines
become me. I bear
a trace of invasion
and reek
of a martyr’s will.
A tangle
of medicinal weeds
interrupts my molting
descent.
Dandelion greens fuzz
up my apathy. A flower
dares itself to bloom
amongst my most quiet
scars.
When the rain comes,
I turn mud in my lover’s mouth.
Something fecund hums
through my blood
And maybe . . . this
is the living. These
would-be dead things in
the same place, the same time
that is
my body. Ours. Not mine—
unowned and fruited and
poor and black and ugly and Here
with you. I reach
a hand out the wildness
And catch hold
a soft pulse
whispering:
Together,
we nursed you
don’t you dare
give up
Copyright © 2023 by Ra Malika Imhotep. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on January 30, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.